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Wondering which large US metropolitan areas are creating and sustaining the most jobs? Check out the 2015 Milken Institute’s Best-Performing Cities Index. The index examines job, wage and salary, and technology growth. The overall top 10 large metros include:

San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.

San Francisco-Redwood City-South San Francisco, Calif.

Provo-Orem, Utah

Austin-Round Rock, Texas

Dallas-Plano-Irving, Texas

Raleigh, N.C.

Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, Wash.

Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, Ore.-Wash.

Greeley, Colo.

San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles-Arroyo Grande, Calif.

That Is Where I’d Truly Like to Be

Kraft Heinz is moving the headquarters of the company’s US meats division from Madison, Wis., to Chicago. The Oscar Mayer unit in Madison will close, affecting 300 employees. The move is expected to occur in early 2016 and will bring 250 jobs to the Aon Center in downtown Chicago. The company has also announced plans to construct a $200-million manufacturing facility on a 70-acre (28.3-hectare) parcel in the Eastern Iowa Industrial Center in Iowa’s Quad Cities region.

The iconic Oscar Mayer Wienermobile.

Photo courtesy of Kraft Heinz

Well-Wired Cities

The Center for Digital Government released the names of the winning cities in its Digital Cities Survey. The survey looks at 10 initiatives in four categories: citizen engagement, policy, operations, and technology and data. “The top-ranked digital city governments in this year’s survey are using cloud services, data analytics and mobile apps — among other technologies — to help citizens interact with government more easily than ever before,” said Todd Sander, executive director of the Center for Digital Government.

Below are the top-ranked cities in the four population designations that are considered:

Philadelphia, Pa. (250,000 or more) — Created an Innovation Lab for multi-department technology development and encourages collaboration with both high schools and universities to mentor students and increase participation in STEM-related education.

Using data from Indeed, the world’s largest employment site by user, Austin-based SpareFoot crunched the data to determine which 10 US cities were best for engineers. Based on job availability, median salary, median home price and median annual rent, the list runs as follows:

Atlanta

Houston

Chicago

New York City

San Francisco

Dallas

San Jose

Austin

Washington, D.C.

San Diego

Patty Rasmussen

Patty Rasmussen has written about economic and business development for more than a decade with Site Selection and other business publications. As a freelance journalist she covered the Atlanta Braves from 1998 until 2010, and wrote for media outlets including Major League Baseball, Womenetics.com and WebMD.